Reinette du Canada

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
'Canadian Reinette' apple
'Reinette Grise du Canada',
probably a sub-cultivar
Malus domestica
Hybrid parentageOld French cultivar
Cultivar'Canadian Reinette'
Origin France, before 1771

Reinette du Canada or Canadian Reinette is, despite its name, an old French cultivar of domesticated apple. It is a reinette type of golden apple, with much russeting, which keeps shape in cooking and is mainly used for that purpose especially in apple strudel.[1]

Even today it is considered as the default

Normandy, France and was first described in 1771.[3]

The fruit is tart and mostly used for cooking if picked early and used quickly; if stored for some time it gets softer and sweeter hence more recommended for fresh eating.[3] It blossoms approximately three days after the Cox's Orange Pippin.[4] Typical size: width 83-87 mm, height 59-71 mm, stalk 11-17 mm.[5][6][7]

  • Reinette du Canada is triploid.
  • S genotype S1 S2 S3
  • Vitamin C 17 mg/100 gram
  • Density 0.80[8]

Chemical composition

Sugar 14.0-16.4%, acid 0.80-0.91%, pectine 0.74-0.77%.[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Reinette Grise du Canada by Orange Pippin
  2. ^ Reinette du Canada at Orange Pippin
  3. ^ a b c Salt Spring Apple Company
  4. ^ Garden Apple ID
  5. ^ Warder, American Pomology,
  6. ^ Downing, Fruits and Fruit-Trees of America, 1885
  7. ^ Beach, The Apples of New York, 1905
  8. ^ Petzold Herbert Apfelsorten, 1990
  9. ^ Pomologia Republicii Populare Romine, 1964

External links

  • Beach, S.A.; Booth, N.O.; Taylor, O.M. (1905), "Canada Reinette", The apples of New York, vol. 1, Albany: J. B. Lyon, pp. 93–94
  • National Fruit Collection, retrieved 11 November 2015